DIAGNOSIS OF OSTEOPOROSIS - USEFULNESS OF PHOTON ABSORPTIOMETRY AT RADIUS
- 1 January 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 18 (5) , 432-437
Abstract
The photon-absorption method (Cameron-Sorenson) is commonly used in the diagnosis of osteoporosis to measure bone mineral in appendicular bones. Although this method gives accurate and reproducible results when applied to the distal radius and midradius, separation between osteoporotic patients and age-matched normals was less than satisfactory because of a large overlap. By contrast, a radiographic index based on the pattern of trabecular bone at the proximal femur (Singh index) gave a better separation between the 2 populations. The Singh index discriminates better, probably because osteoporotic patients have a greater proportion of loss of trabecular bone of the axial skeleton than of cortical bone of the appendicular skeleton.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The loss of bone mineral with aging and its relationship to risk of fracture.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1975
- Femoral Trabecular-Pattern Index for Evaluation of Spinal OsteoporosisAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1972
- Measurement of Bone Mineral in vivo: An Improved MethodScience, 1963